There are a lot of shitty things (I said it! Clutch your pearls!)
about pregnancy loss. Today I'm pissed that my phone was smart enough to
magically transform all the advertisements in my feeds to pitches for maternity
clothes the second I added a pregnancy tracking app but is not smart enough to
dial it back after 4 days of frantic "first trimester bleeding"
google searches.
This time was slower and more drawn out than the first shocking,
quick loss four years ago, but fast or slow, the anguish of watching a beloved
little hope of life drip out of your body is a unique misery.
We were so very surprised to discover I was pregnant. Shocked,
anxious, delighted, terrified, and full of nervous energy. I was not surprised
to discover I was miscarrying a few weeks later. I tried to channel my inner
Han Solo, but of course, I had gorged myself on all "the odds" the
minute I saw those two pink lines appear. Pregnant at 40 is not exactly a walk
in the park.
This lost pregnancy is something I can point to when people ask when
we're going to have second or chuff my shoulder and tell me the stories of
their college roommate's sister who had a baby at 46. "Look", I can
say, "we tried, and it didn't work out".
Also, why is it still OK for casual acquaintances to inquire about
one’s child bearing plans? Or strangers? Like, absolute strangers ask me why we
only have one. Can you think of many things more sensitive or emotionally
fraught than asking a person you barely know why they don’t have one/more
babies? Seriously, people. Please stop.
Trying to trust God with our "family planning" has been
one of the hardest, most humbling spiritual and emotional experiences of
adulthood. The pastor who conducted our pre-marital counseling wisely told us
that in his considerable experience, nothing in married life will demonstrate
our lack of control over our lives than whether and when we have children.
People who desperately want to have children and do not, people who do not want
children or who do not want them right now find themselves expecting, people
who try to time their children around a timetable and are crushed when the plan
does not play out the way they intended.
Nine years after that counseling, and I'm still smarting from the
truth of it.
I spent about 11 days in pregnancy limbo. Bleeding, but no
cramping. Hormones rising, but not fast enough. Being told by one midwife that
I should not have “false hope”, and by an OB that we should keep checking hormones
because “we’ve been surprise before”. Up and down, back and forth, clutching to
hope and then peeling back away. Hours of almost every night of those 11 days
were spent in panic-wracked midnight internet searching, blanket over my head,
hands clutched around the glow of my screen, tears rolling across my cheeks and
onto my pillow.
I started out looking desperately for a little hope that maybe,
somehow, this would turn out OK. Some medical website that could tell me
that some bleeding a lot of bleeding in the first trimester
could be no big deal. A stat that would reassure me that my hormone levels
could miraculously skyrocket after starting to tank. Inevitably, I ended up
down a rabbit hole of pregnant mom chat boards. All of us, all of us dying to
know that someone, somewhere, had gone through what we're going through.
Someone knows what this is like. Someone had the same exact story - the
anxiety, the heartbreak, the uncertainty, the desperation. Some of these
anxious mommas went on to have healthy babies, some did not. But there in the
dark, I found the words of comfort I needed: "that happened to me".
All those nights I lay crying under the blankets, I reached out to
God in my typical, somewhat “unorthodox” way. Not with classic hymns or prayers
or even scripture, but with my own personal mantra. U2 lyrics, naturally.
When I was all messed up
And I had opera in my head
Your love was a light bulb
Hanging over my bed
And I had opera in my head
Your love was a light bulb
Hanging over my bed
These words have comforted me over and over and over again in the
dark and scary places, when my mind wanders down the Valley of the Shadow of
Death. I’ve been there a few times now. The chaos and the clatter, the tragedy
and the wailing – the opera in my head – are quieted by directing my gaze straight
up, where I have always been able to see some glow of God’s love for me. Light
my way.
Here's what I want to tell you if you are in, or have been in, the
shadowy trenches of miscarriage:
If you're angry, frustrated, confused, and heartbroken, you are
not alone.
If you're relieved, calm, and resolved, and eager to move on, you
are not alone.
If you're doubting yourself or you feel guilty or ashamed, you are
not alone. And it is not your fault.
If you feel embarrassed for excitedly telling people about the
pregnancy before it was "safe" and just want to swallow your loss and
never mention it to another person, you are not alone.
If you want to tell everyone and write a blog post and get a
tattoo or a piece of jewelry to remember and keep remembering, you are not
alone.
If your desire for another child was galvanized by this loss, and
you cannot wait to try again, you are not alone.
If you look at the grief stacked up on your soft heart and cannot
bear to try this all again, you are not alone.
Over the past four days, I’ve felt every single one of these
things, and around again, in swirling overwhelm.
Reach out to people and let them know that you need a hug, a
drink, a latte, a walk, a chat. Reach out to someone you know who has been
through miscarriage. Reach out to me, if you’re nervous about asking someone
else you know. There are members of this semi-secret tribe of miscarriage
mommas all around you. Every time you share your story, you’ll hear more and
more from others who can tell you in real life “that happened to me, too”.
Letting these stories shine out in the light of day may help another woman who
is stuck in the dark and the secret.
I’ve decided to talk about it openly because even though I knew
other people who had lost pregnancies, both times it happened to me the
strongest feeling I felt was “alone”. Les was supportive and loving and
grieving himself. My close-by girlfriends rallied with time together and
favorite treats. My far-away girlfriends sent texts and love. But still, it’s
something you ultimately have to face in private – either in your doctor’s
office or your bathroom or a combination of the two. It is your precious body
that goes through the physical loss. It still feels pretty dark and lonely.
You will get through it.
Today, I felt calm and resolved and ready to move on to brighter
things. Until my damn pregnancy tracker app – which I deleted – sent me an
email with the “due date countdown” as I crossed another week milestone
according to their data. I unsubscribed from all the things and felt calm
again. And now I wonder if I could make some money creating an app that would
automatically scrub your media feeds and email from ALL THINGS BABY after a
loss. Anyone know how to make that happen?
I ordered a simple charm from an Etsy artist. A gold disc with
three stars stamped into it – two next to each other for the twins, and one off
to the other side for this loss. Maybe someone will ask me about it, and I’ll
tell them what it means. And for a second or two, I’ll speak about the brief
existence of these glimmers of life, and maybe someone will feel less alone
when they hear the story. It’s part of my story – our family’s story. I don’t
know whether God will grow our family, or if we’ll stay small, but in this
season, I’ll try to trust and be present in our now-family and not become
paralyzed by the uncertainty of a maybe-baby.
It has been a rough few weeks for our little Wolf Pack. We’re on
the upswing now, but corporate anxiety takes its toll. Even Pia was tuned in to
the “differentness” of our behavior and conversation, our prayers and tears
since late July. I suggest you try not to have a family crisis while trying to
potty train and start a brand new daycare. Not the best combo.
If we’ve seemed weird or secretive or cryptically “off”, now you’ve
got the scoop. Thanks for all your care and support. Love to all you mommas of
babies not born.